A Case Study on Cyberbullying Rising Among the Children

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  • 8/12/2019 A Case Study on Cyberbullying Rising Among the Children

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    A Case Study on Cyberbullying rising among the Children

    Three out of 10 parents in India say their children have been victims of cyberbullying and a

    majority of them through social networking sites like Facebook, according to an online globalpoll released on Wednesday.

    The survey done by Ipsos - a global market research company - found that 45% of Indian parentsbelieved a child in their community was being cyberbullied while a majority (53%) parents are

    aware of the issue.

    Cyberbullying is when a child or group of children - under the age of 18 - intentionally

    intimidate, offend, threaten or embarrass another child or group of kids specifically through the

    use of information technology, such as a website or chat room on internet, a cellular telephone or

    another mobile device.

    The poll surveyed 18,000 adults in 24 countries, 6,500 of whom were parents. It showed the

    most widely reported vehicle for cyberbullying was social networking sites like Facebook, which60% cited.

    Globally, mobile devices and online chat rooms were a distant second and third, each around

    40%. In India, it is evenly split between social networking sites (55%) and online chat rooms(54%).

    "The findings are quite surprising, which revealed that the frequency of cyberbullying in Indiawas higher than that of western nations, including the US (15%), Britain (11%) and France (5%).

    Prior to this survey, there has been little evidence to suggest cyberbullying is a major issue in thecountry," said Biswarup Banerjee, head - marketing communications, Ipsos in India.

    "The key to this study is that it measures parental awareness of cyberbullying, not actual rates of

    the behaviour. While we can't speculate on what actually happens, it is quite possible that the

    proportion of children actually being cyberbullied is, in fact, understated, since we are speakingwith the parents, not the kids," he said.

    A strong majority (77%) of global citizens say cyberbullying is a fundamentally different type ofbullying that needs special attention from parents and schools, in addition to existing efforts to

    address bullying in general.

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    A Casestudy on Facebook responsible for Breakups and Divorces

    A growing number of marriage break-ups are being blamed on Facebook as love cheats are caught online.

    Lawyer Emma Patel has revealed that EVERY divorce she has dealt with in the past nine months has involved the

    social network website.

    Married couples meet other users online and send 'flirty messages' or have 'inappropriate suggestive chats' whichspouses can use in divorce cases.

    Sites like Facebook, Twitter are tempting couples to cheat on each other. Ms Patel, the head of family law at Hart

    Scales & Hodges Solicitors, in Dorking, Surrey, said that she had dealt with 30 divorces since May last year - and all

    involved Facebook.

    She claimed the site acted a 'virtual third party' in break-ups.

    'Suspicious spouses have used these to spy and find evidence of flirting and even affairs, which have then led to

    break-ups'.

    The lawyer said that she urged all clients to 'stay off' Facebook during divorce proceedings - as it could throw a

    spanner in the works of it going smoothly - especially if they post photos of new lovers.

    She added: 'They feel compelled to share their feelings online, and, in some cases, they not only express their stress,

    but also make inflammatory accusations against their partner.

    'Divorce is a highly-charged and emotional time, but it is vital not to turn the situation into a public slagging match,

    played out for everyone to see online.James Wrigley, 34, of Hackney, east London, said: 'My girlfriend left me after finding out I had been sending

    Facebook messages to a girl at work.

    'She got my password and read the messages and that was the end of that - four years together down the drain, but at

    least we hadn't got married.'